Skd884
MB Enthusiast
- Joined
- Sep 13, 2017
- Messages
- 4,205
- Car
- i3
I do and yes they are present !Still available if you have Alcantara coverings ..
Hahaha
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I do and yes they are present !Still available if you have Alcantara coverings ..
BMW e3 as wellA fuel filler that was hidden behind the folding rear number plate.
Bonus points if you can name the car.
Naturally aspirated diesels. What no turbo?
Last ones i can think of were various VAG models using SDI n/a engines. No doubt killed off by EU emissions standards.
A fuel filler that was hidden behind the folding rear number plate.
Bonus points if you can name the car
Mk 2 escort (australian spec)A fuel filler that was hidden behind the folding rear number plate.
Bonus points if you can name the car.
That's interesting. Any idea why they needed to do it? It must have entailed considerable re-engineering for a relatively small market I would have thought.Mk 2 escort (australian spec)
I was in Fort Lauderdale for a mates wedding in 1988 and we went out for a cruise in his crappy green 70’s car.A fuel filler that was hidden behind the folding rear number plate.
Bonus points if you can name the car.
CZ? Or Jawa maybe, I know it was one of the eastern bloc manufacturers.A slight variation on the theme from two wheels.
When a motorcycle used the same lever for both kick start and gear change.
Again bonus points if you can name the bike. I only know of one make that did this.
The Aussie mk2’s fuel tank was under the boot floor with a hole in the rear panel and boot floor for the filler neck, not 100% sure why, might have been a bigger range tank and for better/lower CG and weight distribution perhaps? They have a blanking ‘cap’ where UK spec cars have the filler for the tank in the tank well inside the boot. South African mk2’s tanks were strapped to the the top inside the boot under the rear window scuttle, which I think always looks a bit odd and you seem to be filling it up from the bottom!That's interesting. Any idea why they needed to do it? It must have entailed considerable re-engineering for a relatively small market I would have thought.
CZ? Or Jawa maybe, I know it was one of the eastern bloc manufacturers.
How about carbs you had to 'tickle' before starting from cold? I had a few old Japanese bikes as field bikes in my early teens during the early 80s that did the rounds in our school year, then I had a BSA Bantam, where you had to tickle the carb before starting from cold.
Triumph , BSA .....and a few Allen keys, spanners and rags in your pocket to fight the oil leaks...............
I had a Triumph Bonneville with Amal carbs and ticklers. .............
An even more elegant application on a similar principle to ticklers was the SU carbs common on British Leyland cars. Tickling was out of the question with the carbs not being as easily accessible so what they did with SU's was to lower the central jet which was effectively the same thing as raising the fuel level. Great carbs SU's and infinitely tuneable.
& and now that I think about it Porsche
These days they are fitted behind the steering wheel..................![]()
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When I first moved to Coventry many years ago I could never work out where I was on the ring road, as all junctions (bar one) looked alike, and were very close together.Compass stuck on the windscreen
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